Four Denver-area residents whose good deeds impacted many lives have died.

Services for Anne Law, who spent 20 years as assistant editor of the Denver Social Register and Record, and Dr. William Inkret are scheduled for 2 p.m. today. The celebration of Law’s life will be at New Hope Church in Castle Rock while the funeral mass for Inkret will be held at Mother of God Church in Denver.

Family members and close friends gather at 10 a.m. today for a memorial for retired pediatrician Ray Rademacher; a celebration of his life, to which the public is invited, is being planned for April. Ruth “Perkie” Allen was laid to rest on Feb. 25. Allen, a founder of Denver Civic Ballet and a longtime volunteer at Sewall Child Development Center, died on Valentine’s Day, two days short of her 97th birthday.

Law, who was 92 when she died on Feb. 18, worked next to Rosie the Riveter at Douglas Aircraft in Long Beach during World War II and jokingly referred to herself as Tillie the Templater. She and her late husband, Bing Law, were active on the Denver social scene for years, particularly with organizations devoted to furthering the art of dance. She was a founder of Le Bal de Ballet and the Fine Arts Affiliates of Loretto Heights College.

Rademacher was a highly-respected pediatrician who joined Southeast Denver Pediatrics in 1961, and practiced there until his retirement in July, 1995. He taught hundreds of residents, medical students and was considered one of the most outstanding clinicians in our community.

Inkret, along with his wife, Bunkie, was active in medical circles and with such groups as Friends of Nursing and what was then called the Hall of Life at Denver Museum of Nature & Science.